When you wake up in the morning, you'll get a full analysis of your night's sleep, including details of your environment, disturbances that may have occurred, plus tips on how to improve your sleep quality.

If you have trouble sleeping, I highly suggest checking out Sense.

It's not a magic pill — buying it won't automatically result in better sleep right away — but it does identify the problems in your environment, and offers specific suggestions as a means to solve them. In my own extensive tests with Sense, I've gotten better sleep, and I enjoy how it measures my sleep and presents it in a beautiful way. It's easily one of my favorite new products.

And now is the best time to try it. This week, Hello is releasing an all-new Sense, which is packed with new features and abilities, chief among them being voice control. Hence the new name: "Sense with Voice."

"You shouldn't be looking at your smartphone before you go to bed."

Hello

"Voice has been on the road map for quite a while now," James Proud, the 25-year-old CEO of Hello, told Business Insider. "Even before Amazon did Echo, we always thought voice was going to be this beautiful interaction you'd want to have on your nightstand."

With the first Sense, you'd have to open the Sense app on your phone to create alarms or learn details about your sleep environment. I had no problem doing that, but as Proud noted, it's not ideal to use your smartphone right before bed.

"You should't be looking at your smartphone before you go to bed," he said. "It's detrimental for sleep."

With the new Sense, you can just say "Okay Sense, wake me up at 7 am." Or, "Okay Sense, How did I sleep last night?" to get those answers right away — no smartphone required.

Expect voice control to replicate most functions from within the Sense app. It'll be interesting how useful this is in practice, but I like Proud's reason for the implementation, which aligns well with the goal of the product itself, to help you sleep better.

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New hardware

Sense

Voice control isn't the only new thing in Hello's second-generation Sense; it also has a bevy of new sensors to help you better understand your bedroom environment.

The first Sense could previously measure light, humidity, temperature, air quality, and noise. The new device will also be able to measure volatile organic compounds like CO2, as well as UV levels in the room, light temperature and barometric pressure.

"It's no longer just the light sensor looking at levels of lux, we're also looking at the wavelengths of that light, which lets you determine if that's coming from an artificial source such as a phone or a tablet or a laptop, versus warm lights in the room or sunlight."

Of course, the more information Sense can collect, the more helpful it can be with suggestions on improving your room conditions until they reach optimal levels, which are said to help you get better sleep.

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An improved "sleep pill"

Hello

The other component getting a big update is the Sleep Pill: a button roughly the size of a quarter that you attach to your pillow, which monitors your movements during the night and sends that data to the Sense app to analyze.

You don't recharge the Pill at all, but the last version of the Sleep Pill could last about a year. In roughly five months using Sense, my Sleep Pill is still going strong.

Hello has improved the Sleep Pill even further: It's been totally redesigned to be easier to use, take advantage of the new Sense's added sensors, and can now last over two years.

Sense also calls it "virtually indestructible," but hopefully you're not doing too many destructive things in your bedroom to begin with.

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New "Expansions"

Hello

The final major component in the new Sense is something called "Expansions."

The idea is, Sense should be able to hook into "smart home" gadgets that have a direct impact on your sleep. At launch, Sense with Voice will support the Nest learning thermostat and Philips Hue Lights.

The idea is to let all of these products work in harmony. Let's say you want the apartment to stay cold during the night while you sleep, but warm up as soon as you wake up. Just ask Sense with your voice, and it will have that set up for you.

Or maybe your apartment is like mine, and it's normally cold at night but gets very hot around dawn. Just ask Sense to maintain a certain temperature, and it'll automatically regulate the conditions in your home, just by sensing the environment and talking to those other electronics.

Proud said Hello is looking to add more expansions soon.

"We don't want to do the whole home automation thing but we wanted to look at a few key areas that impact your sleep," Proud said. "We're starting with Nest and Hue, but we're branching out to build more of these — around you and your sleep."

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"Applying the latest and greatest in sleep science."

Hello

Hello also recently hired its first chief scientist - Matt Walker, a professor of sleep and neuroscience at Berkeley - to help Hello research new sensors, new hardware and improve the mobile application.

"Everything that we've done with Sense, it's always been about applying the latest and greatest in sleep science — but for us that wasn't enough," Proud told us. "We need to be pioneering that stuff ourselves."

In addition to this new update in the hardware, Hello is continually improving the software that powers it all, from the analysis algorithms to the sleep detection systems and the smart alarm. Proud says you can expect lots of changes to the mobile app, along with the hardware, when Sense with Voice rolls out over the next couple of weeks.

Speaking of, Hello is finally making Sense available through mass market retailers, including Best Buy and Target, in addition to Amazon and the company's own online store.

Personally, I'm very much looking forward to trying Sense with Voice. It'll be interesting to see how robust the voice control is, as well as the new app and all its new metrics.

"We believe we have something people love, so this was all about making it even better for the purpose of improving your sleep," Proud told us. "Now, with the next version, we're beginning to branch into a number of areas we see as very exciting."

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Sense with Voice costs $149. It'll be available in black and white.

Hello

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Sense with Voice is available to order through Amazon, Target, Best Buy, and Hello's website, and will ship within two weeks of your order. The whole system costs $149. Check out the launch video below.